| Do you have any say in employee compensation? Do you have any say in employee perks/benefits? I mean a real say, not preferences which are allowed by some benevolent analyst from HR. If the CEO goes rogue and the company is private, can rank-and-file employees oust them? Can you vote out your manager or your manager's manager? Is there even a process in place to do that? Do you follow orders from management? What happens if you don't? What happens if you disobey your manager in a public setting? Can you get fired without notice? How about laid off? Can you get fired because you said something? Do you have a dresscode? What would happen to your employment if you dressed like a clown in customer meetings? Do you risk getting fired if you start talking about unionizing? Do you get fired if you sue the company? Can you bring a gun to work? Does your employee handbook say something about how your run your personal life? Does your employer have rights over IP created outside of working hours? Can you get fired over a DUI outside of company hours? Can you get fired for smoking cigarettes in your free time? etc.. Some literature for you: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/32889465-private-governm... |
Yes I'm aware that corporations set up a legal hierarchy in which management has more power than labor within the corporation. I'm not going to go through your specific questions one by one, since they're largely rhetorical, though some of them don't have the answer you hope for. Some people seem to interpret the lack of formal, democratic processes with a totalitarian dictatorship. I've personally witnessed the firing of C-suite execs in response to employee revolts.
A totalitarian system requires complete subservience. Depending on your position in the labor market, your leverage may vary. My objection isn't to the notion that the employer-employee power balance is lopsided in many cases, to the point where some sectors of the economy are exploitative, but rather that an office by it's nature is akin to a totalitarian dictatorship. Maybe you're just using that phrase for effect, or maybe you genuinely think that working at Google and living in Egypt under President Mubarak is a good comparison. To me it comes off as a bit out of touch.